(Newser)
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The recent spate of shootings could point to a link between violence and the faltering US economy, the Christian Science Monitor reports. “Most of these mass killings are precipitated by some catastrophic loss, and when the economy goes south, there are simply more of these losses,” said criminologist Jack Levin, and others agree. Though direct correlation is tricky to prove, “this is not the average situation,” added another.

The recession in the early '90s “saw a dramatic increase in workplace violence,” said Levin. But finding precedent for the current situation is literally impossible, as data correlating the economy and violence was not collected until after World War II and the Great Depression, the only similarly catastrophic downturn. Whatever the cause, the uptick in violence is “the worst I've seen in years,” one official said.

You know, I thought it might have been a little too much, but the risk that it might appear that I actually agreed with your statement was too much to bear... I'm sure your statement was sarcastic as well, but int his day & age you can never be too sure...